Single currency 'will give GCC greater global clout'

By Rachna Uppal, Staff Reporter
Published: January 21, 2009, 23:19

Dubai: The prospects for a single currency between the six Gulf Cooperation
Council (GCC) members by 2010 have increased as a result of the global
economic downturn, according to an influential Dubai-based economist.

Nasser Al Saidi, chief economist at the Dubai International Financial Centre
(DIFC), said that monetary union will allow the GCC increased influence in
the global economy, and allow it to become "part of a new financial
architecture". Indeed, a single central bank across the GCC would have much
greater leverage over setting a unified interest rate and boosting economic
activity in the region. On paper, the timeframe for GCC monetary union, from
which Oman has opted out, remains 2010, but the deadline appears
unrealistic, with slow progress by states on meeting convergence criteria,
and region-wide high inflation in 2008 a particularly thorny issue.
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The high level meeting in Dubai on Tuesday - entitled The World in 2009 -
was hosted by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) and assembled delegates
from the business, financial and political domains.

It was broadly agreed that the impact of the global economic situation in
the region only became more visible in the last quarter of 2008, with the
EIU projecting growth in the Middle East and North Africa region to slow to
4.6 per cent in 2009 from the projected 6.1 per cent last year.

Disparities within the region are also projected to become sharper, with
larger economies, including the UAE, seeing a more pronounced impact of the
slowdown; the EIU predicts GDP growth of 1.5 per cent for the UAE in 2009,
down from about 7.7 per cent last year.

"There will be no meaningful sustained recovery until 2010-2011," said Robin
Bew, chief economist at EIU.

He added that "2009 is all about policy", which he regards as essential to
ease the deleveraging process afflicting regional economies such as the UAE.


Economists and investors agreed that the need for a top-down response was
essential.

Ahmad Al Khateeb, managing director and chief executive of Jadwa Investment
in Saudi Arabia, said that "governments need this kind of shock to speed
things up."

The UAE Central Bank has already guaranteed unlimited deposits, and has
pledged to push ahead with increased public, and infrastructure and
development spending, which should in turn send a positive signal to
businesses to continue investments.
According to Al Saidi, a reorientation of the Gulf petro-economies' foreign
spending towards more domestic issues is likely to be prioritised.
http://www.gulfnews.com/BUSINESS/Economy/10277339.html

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